94 S.E. 455 | N.C. | 1917
This is an action for killing plaintiff's cow by a train running backwards. The defendant offered evidence tending to show that the train did not run over the cow, but the cow, being separated from its companions, tried to run over the train and "butted in," and asked the court to charge that the presumption of negligence against a railroad company killing cattle, arising under Revisal, 2645, is rebutted by this evidence.
The court properly refused to so charge. Hardison v. R. R.,
The track was straight for a long distance, so the cows could have been seen, but the train ran into a drove of them while running backwards.
A somewhat similar case is Randall v. R. R.,
It is always bad manners, and generally brings on unpleasant results, to "butt in." But in this case the allegation is denied, and the judge could not take the evidence as true, its credibility (786) being a matter for the jury.
No error.
Cited: Borden v. R. R.,